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Dissolved Company, Still Trading ?

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tali1 | 21:30 Tue 10th Jan 2023 | Business & Finance
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According to Companies House ,The Pearl Tent Company was dissolved (with a compulsory strike off) on 20 September 2022.Yet looking on google it still seems to be trading ? (which it shouldn't be according to google check)
I don't have any dealings withe company , it is just a general question.
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Directors resign for all sorts of reasons, Tali1. In some cases a limited company is created purely to sell on later. e.g. firms such as this one register thousands of companies as 'general traders' (or similar) and then change the names of those companies to order when someone wants to acquire a limited company in a fuss-free way:...
21:36 Wed 11th Jan 2023
When i look it was dissolved 2013.. Maybe theres several with that name?
This one is trading but its par t of another company. Its Pearl Tents Co
https://www.pearltents.co.uk/about-us/
2023 THE PEARL TENT COMPANY - PROUD TO BE PART OF THE HOUSE OF HUD GROUP OF COMPANIES WWW.HOUSEOFHUD.COM.
RYE ISLAND, HOLLANDS LANE, HENFIELD BN5 9QY
Question Author
It is the last link you sent with Director Katherine Hudson but says Dissolved ...https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/12585413
that may be an old brochure... so its hard to be sure there trading just because there on the web.... have you tried ringing to see if still trading and ask how if they were disolved
Question Author
I assume that as long as Directors have met their legal obligations a compulsory strike off does not prevent them from setting up another company , or continung as a director ?
It's not unusual for a brand name to be sold on to, or to be otherwise acquired by, a different company when the original owner of that brand name ceases trading.

The Pearl Tent Company Limited (which was run by Katherine Hudson), indeed, been dissolved.
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/12585413/officers

However the 'Pearl Tent Company' brand name (without the 'Limited') bit has been taken on by Ms Hudson's other company, House Of Hud Limited:
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/05320467/officers

House Of Hud Limited also trades under other brand names, including the Arabian Tent Company:
https://arabiantents.com/
>>> I assume that as long as Directors have met their legal obligations a compulsory strike off does not prevent them from setting up another company, or continuing as a director ?

A compulsory strike-off isn't necessarily bad news for anyone. (i.e. there aren't necessarily and unpaid creditors).

For example, when business dried up for the will-writing company that I ran, it was simpler (and cheaper) for me to simply fail to file any accounts with Companies House than to formally dissolve the company myself. That then resulted in the company being compulsorily struck off the register.

The only downside to such a way of doing things is that any remaining assets of the company then pass to the Official Receiver. (My company had zero assets, apart from one inkjet printer that I didn't think the OR would really be too bothered about when I held onto it).

As I didn't leave anyone 'financially in the lurch', there's clearly no reason why I should be disbarred from any further directorships if I wished to take them on.
Question Author
@Buenchico On a slightly separate note , ive noticed lots of companies have Directors who have resigned.Are there loads of boardroom bust ups going on ? or is it something rather more mundane and pragmatic?
The register is interesting. I know people who are listed as directors of maybe a dozen companies and yet there not well off and often just seem to work from home or drive a little white van
Directors resign for all sorts of reasons, Tali1. In some cases a limited company is created purely to sell on later. e.g. firms such as this one register thousands of companies as 'general traders' (or similar) and then change the names of those companies to order when someone wants to acquire a limited company in a fuss-free way:
https://www.1stformations.co.uk/

[In case I've not made that clear, businesses like 1st Formations set up thousands of companies called, for example, 1st Form Number 1 Ltd, 1st Form Number 2 Ltd, etc, with articles of governance which say that they can do everything from selling fruit and veg to carrying out space research. If you want to set up 'Tali 1 Super Bargains Ltd', 1st Formations will sell you '1st Form Number 987 Ltd' but change the name of that company to your chosen one as they do so].

So there will the resignation of at least one director even before the 'real' company comes into existence. (i.e. the owner of 1st Formations will resign as a director of 1st Form Number 987 Ltd when he sells it to you and it becomes Tali1 Super Bargains Ltd. His directorship will still show up, as 'resigned' when anyone looks up the details of Tali1 Super Bargains Ltd).

At other times a prominent businessman might be paid a fee to allow his name to appear on the list of the board of directors of a new company to encourage investment, even though he's not planning to remain as a director for any length of time. (e.g. if you were seeking investors to put money into your new company, it would look good if you could honestly say that Richard Branson was a director. You wouldn't need to declare that he'd said that he'd be resigning after just a few months).

If a business is doing particularly well, the directors might decide that it's a good time to sell it, so that they can make a quick buck (especially if, as with many small businesses, they own all of the shares in the company). In which case, when they relinquish control of the business, all of their names will then show as 'resigned'.

Exactly the same is true of a business which the owners want to get rid of because it's not making any money though. So a long list of resignations doesn't necessarily mean that a business has either been doing particularly well or particularly badly.

Other directors might resign because they've no longer got the time to run the business or, say, for health reasons.

A few directors are forced to resign because a court bars them from holding directorships.

There are many other reasons why a director might resign. In trying to work out whether a business is likely to be 'kosher' or not, I tend to concentrate on the backgrounds of the existing directors, rather than on the number of directors who've resigned. For example, if clicking on the name of a director of 'Super Great Double Glazing Limited' shows that he was previously a director of 15 other double-glazing companies, all of which have ceased trading, as well as being a director of another 6 double-glazing companies, all of which have overdue accounts, I probably won't be ordering my double-glazing from his business!

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